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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 127358. March 31, 2005.]

NOEL BUENAVENTURA , petitioner, vs . COURT OF APPEALS and


ISABEL LUCIA SINGH BUENAVENTURA , respondents.

[G.R. No. 127449. March 31, 2005.]

NOEL BUENAVENTURA , petitioner, vs . COURT OF APPEALS and


ISABEL LUCIA SINGH BUENAVENTURA , respondents.

DECISION

AZCUNA , J : p

These cases involve a petition for the declaration of nullity of marriage, which was filed by
petitioner Noel Buenaventura on July 12, 1992, on the ground of the alleged psychological
incapacity of his wife, Isabel Singh Buenaventura, herein respondent. After respondent filed
her answer, petitioner, with leave of court, amended his petition by stating that both he and
his wife were psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential obligations of
marriage. In response, respondent filed an amended answer denying the allegation that
she was psychologically incapacitated. 1
On July 31, 1995, the Regional Trial Court promulgated a Decision, the dispositive portion
of which reads:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered as follows:

1) Declaring and decreeing the marriage entered into between plaintiff Noel A.
Buenaventura and defendant Isabel Lucia Singh Buenaventura on July 4,
1979, null and void ab initio;

2) Ordering the plaintiff to pay defendant moral damages in the amount of


2.5 million pesos and exemplary damages of 1 million pesos with 6%
interest from the date of this decision plus attorney's fees of P100,000.00;
3) Ordering the plaintiff to pay the defendant expenses of litigation of
P50,000.00, plus costs;

4) Ordering the liquidation of the assets of the conjugal partnership property[,]


particularly the plaintiff's separation/retirement benefits received from the
Far East Bank [and] Trust Company[,] by ceding, giving and paying to her
fifty percent (50%) of the net amount of P3,675,335.79 or P1,837,667.89
together with 12% interest per annum from the date of this decision and
one-half (1/2) of his outstanding shares of stock with Manila Memorial
Park and Provident Group of Companies;

5) Ordering him to give a regular support in favor of his son Javy Singh
Buenaventura in the amount of P15,000.00 monthly, subject to
modification as the necessity arises;
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6) Awarding the care and custody of the minor Javy Singh Buenaventura to
his mother, the herein defendant; and
7) Hereby authorizing the defendant to revert back to the use of her maiden
family name Singh.

Let copies of this decision be furnished the appropriate civil registry and registries
of properties. EHaCTA

SO ORDERED. 2

Petitioner appealed the above decision to the Court of Appeals. While the case was
pending in the appellate court, respondent filed a motion to increase the P15,000 monthly
support pendente lite of their son Javy Singh Buenaventura. Petitioner filed an opposition
thereto, praying that it be denied or that such incident be set for oral argument. 3
On September 2, 1996, the Court of Appeals issued a Resolution increasing the support
pendente lite to P20,000. 4 Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration questioning the
said Resolution. 5
On October 8, 1996, the appellate court promulgated a Decision dismissing petitioner's
appeal for lack of merit and affirming in toto the trial court's decision. 6 Petitioner filed a
motion for reconsideration which was denied. From the abovementioned Decision,
petitioner filed the instant Petition for Review on Certiorari.
On November 13, 1996, through another Resolution, the Court of Appeals denied
petitioner's motion for reconsideration of the September 2, 1996 Resolution, which
increased the monthly support for the son. 7 Petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari to
question these two Resolutions.
On July 9, 1997, the Petition for Review on Certiorari 8 and the Petition for Certiorari 9 were
ordered consolidated by this Court. 1 0
In the Petition for Review on Certiorari petitioner claims that the Court of Appeals decided
the case not in accord with law and jurisprudence, thus:
1. WHEN IT AWARDED DEFENDANT-APPELLEE MORAL DAMAGES IN THE
AMOUNT OF P2.5 MILLION AND EXEMPLARY DAMAGES OF P1 MILLION, WITH
6% INTEREST FROM THE DATE OF ITS DECISION, WITHOUT ANY LEGAL AND
MORAL BASIS;

2. WHEN IT AWARDED P100,000.00 ATTORNEY'S FEES AND P50,000.00


EXPENSES OF LITIGATION, PLUS COSTS, TO DEFENDANT-APPELLEE, WITHOUT
FACTUAL AND LEGAL BASIS;

3. WHEN IT ORDERED PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT NOEL TO PAY DEFENDANT-


APPELLEE ONE-HALF OR P1,837,667.89 OUT OF HIS RETIREMENT BENEFITS
RECEIVED FROM THE FAR EAST BANK AND TRUST CO., WITH 12% INTEREST
THEREON FROM THE DATE OF ITS DECISION, NOTWITHSTANDING THAT SAID
RETIREMENT BENEFITS ARE GRATUITOUS AND EXCLUSIVE PROPERTY OF
NOEL, AND ALSO TO DELIVER TO DEFENDANT-APPELLEE ONE-HALF OF HIS
SHARES OF STOCK WITH THE MANILA MEMORIAL PARK AND THE PROVIDENT
GROUP OF COMPANIES, ALTHOUGH SAID SHARES OF STOCK WERE ACQUIRED
BY NOEL BEFORE HIS MARRIAGE TO RESPONDENT ISABEL AND ARE,
THEREFORE, AGAIN HIS EXCLUSIVE PROPERTIES; AND

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4. WHEN IT AWARDED EXCLUSIVE CARE AND CUSTODY OVER THE
PARTIES' MINOR CHILD TO DEFENDANT-APPELLEE WITHOUT ASKING THE
CHILD (WHO WAS ALREADY 13 YEARS OLD AT THAT TIME) HIS CHOICE AS TO
WHOM, BETWEEN HIS TWO PARENTS, HE WOULD LIKE TO HAVE CUSTODY
OVER HIS PERSON. 1 1

In the Petition for Certiorari, petitioner advances the following contentions:


THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ABUSED ITS DISCRETION WHEN IT
REFUSED TO SET RESPONDENT'S MOTION FOR INCREASED SUPPORT FOR THE
PARTIES' SON FOR HEARING. 1 2

THERE WAS NO NEED FOR THE COURT OF APPEALS TO INCREASE JAVY'S


MONTHLY SUPPORT OF P15,000.00 BEING GIVEN BY PETITIONER EVEN AT
PRESENT PRICES. 1 3

IN RESOLVING RESPONDENT'S MOTION FOR THE INCREASE OF JAVY'S


SUPPORT, THE COURT OF APPEALS SHOULD HAVE EXAMINED THE LIST OF
EXPENSES SUBMITTED BY RESPONDENT IN THE LIGHT OF PETITIONER'S
OBJECTIONS THERETO, INSTEAD OF MERELY ASSUMING THAT JAVY IS
ENTITLED TO A P5,000 INCREASE IN SUPPORT AS SAID AMOUNT IS "TOO
MINIMAL." 1 4

LIKEWISE, THE COURT OF APPEALS SHOULD HAVE GIVEN PETITIONER AN


OPPORTUNITY TO PROVE HIS PRESENT INCOME TO SHOW THAT HE CANNOT
AFFORD TO INCREASE JAVY'S SUPPORT. 1 5

With regard to the first issue in the main case, the Court of Appeals articulated: AcSCaI

On Assignment of Error C, the trial court, after findings of fact ascertained from
the testimonies not only of the parties particularly the defendant-appellee but
likewise, those of the two psychologists, awarded damages on the basis of
Articles 21, 2217 and 2229 of the Civil Code of the Philippines.

Thus, the lower court found that plaintiff-appellant deceived the defendant-
appellee into marrying him by professing true love instead of revealing to her that
he was under heavy parental pressure to marry and that because of pride he
married defendant-appellee; that he was not ready to enter into marriage as in
fact his career was and always would be his first priority; that he was unable to
relate not only to defendant-appellee as a husband but also to his son, Javy, as a
father; that he had no inclination to make the marriage work such that in times of
trouble, he chose the easiest way out, that of leaving defendant-appellee and their
son; that he had no desire to keep defendant-appellee and their son as proved by
his reluctance and later, refusal to reconcile after their separation; that the
aforementioned caused defendant-appellee to suffer mental anguish, anxiety,
besmirched reputation, sleepless nights not only in those years the parties were
together but also after and throughout their separation.

Plaintiff-appellant assails the trial court's decision on the ground that unlike those
arising from a breach in ordinary contracts, damages arising as a consequence of
marriage may not be awarded. While it is correct that there is, as yet, no decided
case by the Supreme Court where damages by reason of the performance or non-
performance of marital obligations were awarded, it does not follow that no such
award for damages may be made.
Defendant-appellee, in her amended answer, specifically prayed for moral and
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exemplary damages in the total amount of 7 million pesos. The lower court, in the
exercise of its discretion, found full justification of awarding at least half of what
was originally prayed for. We find no reason to disturb the ruling of the trial court.
16

The award by the trial court of moral damages is based on Articles 2217 and 21 of the
Civil Code, which read as follows:
ART. 2217. Moral damages include physical suffering, mental anguish, fright,
serious anxiety, besmirched reputation, wounded feelings, moral shock, social
humiliation, and similar injury. Though incapable of pecuniary computation,
moral damages may be recovered if they are the proximate result of the
defendant's wrongful act or omission.

ART. 21. Any person who wilfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner
that is contrary to morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the
latter for the damage.

The trial court referred to Article 21 because Article 2219 1 7 of the Civil Code enumerates
the cases in which moral damages may be recovered and it mentions Article 21 as one of
the instances. It must be noted that Article 21 states that the individual must willfully
cause loss or injury to another. There is a need that the act is willful and hence done in
complete freedom. In granting moral damages, therefore, the trial court and the Court of
Appeals could not but have assumed that the acts on which the moral damages were
based were done willfully and freely, otherwise the grant of moral damages would have no
leg to stand on.
On the other hand, the trial court declared the marriage of the parties null and void based
on Article 36 of the Family Code, due to psychological incapacity of the petitioner, Noel
Buenaventura. Article 36 of the Family Code states:
A marriage contracted by any party who, at the time of the celebration, was
psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential marital obligations of
marriage, shall likewise be void even if such incapacity becomes manifest only
after its solemnization.

Psychological incapacity has been defined, thus: aEHTSc

. . . no less than a mental (not physical) incapacity that causes a party to be truly
incognitive of the basic marital covenants that concomitantly must be assumed
and discharged by the parties to the marriage which, as so expressed by Article 68
of the Family Code, include their mutual obligations to live together, observe love,
respect and fidelity and render help and support. There is hardly any doubt that
the intendment of the law has been to confine the meaning of "psychological
incapacity" to the most serious cases of personality disorders clearly
demonstrative of an utter insensitivity or inability to give meaning and
significance to the marriage. . . . 1 8
The Court of Appeals and the trial court considered the acts of the petitioner after the
marriage as proof of his psychological incapacity, and therefore a product of his
incapacity or inability to comply with the essential obligations of marriage. Nevertheless,
said courts considered these acts as willful and hence as grounds for granting moral
damages. It is contradictory to characterize acts as a product of psychological incapacity,
and hence beyond the control of the party because of an innate inability, while at the same
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time considering the same set of acts as willful. By declaring the petitioner as
psychologically incapacitated, the possibility of awarding moral damages on the same set
of facts was negated. The award of moral damages should be predicated, not on the mere
act of entering into the marriage, but on specific evidence that it was done deliberately and
with malice by a party who had knowledge of his or her disability and yet willfully
concealed the same. No such evidence appears to have been adduced in this case.
For the same reason, since psychological incapacity means that one is truly incognitive of
the basic marital covenants that one must assume and discharge as a consequence of
marriage, it removes the basis for the contention that the petitioner purposely deceived
the private respondent. If the private respondent was deceived, it was not due to a willful
act on the part of the petitioner. Therefore, the award of moral damages was without basis
in law and in fact.
Since the grant of moral damages was not proper, it follows that the grant of exemplary
damages cannot stand since the Civil Code provides that exemplary damages are
imposed in addition to moral, temperate, liquidated or compensatory damages. 1 9
With respect to the grant of attorney's fees and expenses of litigation the trial court
explained, thus:
Regarding Attorney's fees, Art. 2208 of the Civil Code authorizes an award of
attorney's fees and expenses of litigation, other than judicial costs, when as in
this case the plaintiff's act or omission has compelled the defendant to litigate
and to incur expenses of litigation to protect her interest (par. 2), and where the
Court deems it just and equitable that attorney's fees and expenses of litigation
should be recovered. (par. 11) 2 0

The Court of Appeals reasoned as follows:


On Assignment of Error D, as the award of moral and exemplary damages is fully
justified, the award of attorney's fees and costs of litigation by the trial court is
likewise fully justified. 2 1

The acts or omissions of petitioner which led the lower court to deduce his psychological
incapacity, and his act in filing the complaint for the annulment of his marriage cannot be
considered as unduly compelling the private respondent to litigate, since both are
grounded on petitioner's psychological incapacity, which as explained above is a mental
incapacity causing an utter inability to comply with the obligations of marriage. Hence,
neither can be a ground for attorney's fees and litigation expenses. Furthermore, since the
award of moral and exemplary damages is no longer justified, the award of attorney's fees
and expenses of litigation is left without basis.
Anent the retirement benefits received from the Far East Bank and Trust Co. and the
shares of stock in the Manila Memorial Park and the Provident Group of Companies, the
trial court said:
The third issue that must be resolved by the Court is what to do with the assets of
the conjugal partnership in the event of declaration of annulment of the marriage.
The Honorable Supreme Court has held that the declaration of nullity of marriage
carries ipso facto a judgment for the liquidation of property (Domingo v. Court of
Appeals, et al., G.R. No. 104818, Sept. 17, 1993, 226 SCRA, pp. 572-573, 586).
Thus, speaking through Justice Flerida Ruth P. Romero, it was ruled in this case:
When a marriage is declared void ab initio, the law states that the final
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judgment therein shall provide for the liquidation, partition and distribution
of the properties of the spouses, the custody and support of the common
children and the delivery of their presumptive legitimes, unless such
matters had been adjudicated in the previous proceedings. ASTcEa

The parties here were legally married on July 4, 1979, and therefore, all property
acquired during the marriage, whether the acquisition appears to have been made,
contracted or registered in the name of one or both spouses, is presumed to be
conjugal unless the contrary is proved (Art. 116, New Family Code; Art. 160, Civil
Code). Art. 117 of the Family Code enumerates what are conjugal partnership
properties. Among others they are the following:

1) Those acquired by onerous title during the marriage at the expense


of the common fund, whether the acquisition be for the partnership, or for
only one of the spouses;
2) Those obtained from the labor, industry, work or profession of either
or both of the spouses;
3) The fruits, natural, industrial, or civil, due or received during the
marriage from the common property, as well as the net fruits from the
exclusive property of each spouse. . . .
Applying the foregoing legal provisions, and without prejudice to requiring an
inventory of what are the parties' conjugal properties and what are the exclusive
properties of each spouse, it was disclosed during the proceedings in this case
that the plaintiff who worked first as Branch Manager and later as Vice-President
of Far East Bank & Trust Co. received separation/retirement package from the
said bank in the amount of P3,701,500.00 which after certain deductions
amounting to P26,164.21 gave him a net amount of P3,675,335.79 and actually
paid to him on January 9, 1995 (Exhs. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11). Not having shown debts
or obligations other than those deducted from the said retirement/separation pay,
under Art. 129 of the Family Code "The net remainder of the conjugal partnership
properties shall constitute the profits, which shall be divided equally between
husband and wife, unless a different proportion or division was agreed upon in
the marriage settlement or unless there has been a voluntary waiver or forfeiture
of such share as provided in this Code." In this particular case, however, there had
been no marriage settlement between the parties, nor had there been any
voluntary waiver or valid forfeiture of the defendant wife's share in the conjugal
partnership properties. The previous cession and transfer by the plaintiff of his
one-half (1/2) share in their residential house and lot covered by T.C.T. No. S-
35680 of the Registry of Deeds of Paraaque, Metro Manila, in favor of the
defendant as stipulated in their Compromise Agreement dated July 12, 1993, and
approved by the Court in its Partial Decision dated August 6, 1993, was actually
intended to be in full settlement of any and all demands for past support. In
reality, the defendant wife had allowed some concession in favor of the plaintiff
husband, for were the law strictly to be followed, in the process of liquidation of
the conjugal assets, the conjugal dwelling and the lot on which it is situated shall,
unless otherwise agreed upon by the parties, be adjudicated to the spouse with
whom their only child has chosen to remain (Art. 129, par. 9). Here, what was
done was one-half (1/2) portion of the house was ceded to defendant so that she
will not claim anymore for past unpaid support, while the other half was
transferred to their only child as his presumptive legitime.
Consequently, nothing yet has been given to the defendant wife by way of her
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share in the conjugal properties, and it is but just, lawful and fair, that she be
given one-half (1/2) share of the separation/retirement benefits received by the
plaintiff the same being part of their conjugal partnership properties having been
obtained or derived from the labor, industry, work or profession of said defendant
husband in accordance with Art. 117, par. 2 of the Family Code. For the same
reason, she is entitled to one-half (1/2) of the outstanding shares of stock of the
plaintiff husband with the Manila Memorial Park and the Provident Group of
Companies. 2 2

The Court of Appeals articulated on this matter as follows:


On Assignment of Error E, plaintiff-appellant assails the order of the trial court for
him to give one-half of his separation/retirement benefits from Far East Bank &
Trust Company and half of his outstanding shares in Manila Memorial Park and
Provident Group of Companies to the defendant-appellee as the latter's share in
the conjugal partnership.
On August 6, 1993, the trial court rendered a Partial Decision approving the
Compromise Agreement entered into by the parties. In the same Compromise
Agreement, the parties had agreed that henceforth, their conjugal partnership is
dissolved. Thereafter, no steps were taken for the liquidation of the conjugal
partnership.
Finding that defendant-appellee is entitled to at least half of the
separation/retirement benefits which plaintiff-appellant received from Far East
Bank & Trust Company upon his retirement as Vice-President of said company for
the reason that the benefits accrued from plaintiff-appellant's service for the bank
for a number of years, most of which while he was married to defendant-appellee,
the trial court adjudicated the same. The same is true with the outstanding shares
of plaintiff-appellant in Manila Memorial Park and Provident Group of
Companies. As these were acquired by the plaintiff-appellant at the time he was
married to defendant-appellee, the latter is entitled to one-half thereof as her share
in the conjugal partnership. We find no reason to disturb the ruling of the trial
court. 2 3

Since the present case does not involve the annulment of a bigamous marriage, the
provisions of Article 50 in relation to Articles 41, 42 and 43 of the Family Code, providing
for the dissolution of the absolute community or conjugal partnership of gains, as the case
may be, do not apply. Rather, the general rule applies, which is that in case a marriage is
declared void ab initio, the property regime applicable and to be liquidated, partitioned and
distributed is that of equal co-ownership. ASICDH

In Valdes v. Regional Trial Court, Branch 102, Quezon City, 2 4 this Court expounded on the
consequences of a void marriage on the property relations of the spouses and specified
the applicable provisions of law:
The trial court correctly applied the law. In a void marriage, regardless of the
cause thereof, the property relations of the parties during the period of
cohabitation is governed by the provisions of Article 147 or Article 148, such as
the case may be, of the Family Code. Article 147 is a remake of Article 144 of the
Civil Code as interpreted and so applied in previous cases; it provides:

ART. 147. When a man and a woman who are capacitated to marry
each other, live exclusively with each other as husband and wife without
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the benefit of marriage or under a void marriage, their wages and salaries
shall be owned by them in equal shares and the property acquired by both
of them through their work or industry shall be governed by the rules on co-
ownership.

In the absence of proof to the contrary, properties acquired while they lived
together shall be presumed to have been obtained by their joint efforts,
work or industry, and shall be owned by them in equal shares. For
purposes of this Article, a party who did not participate in the acquisition
by the other party of any property shall be deemed to have contributed
jointly in the acquisition thereof if the former's efforts consisted in the care
and maintenance of the family and of the household.
Neither party can encumber or dispose by acts inter vivos of his or her
share in the property acquired during cohabitation and owned in common,
without the consent of the other, until after the termination of their
cohabitation.
When only one of the parties to a void marriage is in good faith, the share
of the party in bad faith in the co-ownership shall be forfeited in favor of
their common children. In case of default of or waiver by any or all of the
common children or their descendants, each vacant share shall belong to
the respective surviving descendants. In the absence of descendants, such
share shall belong to the innocent party. In all cases, the forfeiture shall
take place upon termination of the cohabitation.
This peculiar kind of co-ownership applies when a man and a woman, suffering
no legal impediment to marry each other, so exclusively live together as husband
and wife under a void marriage or without the benefit of marriage. The term
"capacitated" in the provision (in the first paragraph of the law) refers to the legal
capacity of a party to contract marriage, i.e., any "male or female of the age of
eighteen years or upwards not under any of the impediments mentioned in
Articles 37 and 38" of the Code.

Under this property regime, property acquired by both spouses through their work
and industry shall be governed by the rules on equal co-ownership. Any property
acquired during the union is prima facie presumed to have been obtained through
their joint efforts. A party who did not participate in the acquisition of the property
shall still be considered as having contributed thereto jointly if said party's
"efforts consisted in the care and maintenance of the family household." Unlike
the conjugal partnership of gains, the fruits of the couple's separate property are
not included in the co-ownership.
Article 147 of the Family Code, in substance and to the above extent, has clarified
Article 144 of the Civil Code; in addition, the law now expressly provides that
(a) Neither party can dispose or encumber by act[s] inter vivos [of] his or her
share in co-ownership property, without the consent of the other, during the period
of cohabitation; and
(b) In the case of a void marriage, any party in bad faith shall forfeit his or her
share in the co-ownership in favor of their common children; in default thereof or
waiver by any or all of the common children, each vacant share shall belong to
the respective surviving descendants, or still in default thereof, to the innocent
party. The forfeiture shall take place upon the termination of the cohabitation or
declaration of nullity of the marriage. aCHDAE

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xxx xxx xxx
In deciding to take further cognizance of the issue on the settlement of the
parties' common property, the trial court acted neither imprudently nor
precipitately; a court which had jurisdiction to declare the marriage a nullity must
be deemed likewise clothed with authority to resolve incidental and consequential
matters. Nor did it commit a reversible error in ruling that petitioner and private
respondent own the "family home" and all their common property in equal shares,
as well as in concluding that, in the liquidation and partition of the property
owned in common by them, the provisions on co-ownership under the Civil Code,
not Articles 50, 51 and 52, in relation to Articles 102 and 129, of the Family Code,
should aptly prevail. The rules set up to govern the liquidation of either the
absolute community or the conjugal partnership of gains, the property regimes
recognized for valid and voidable marriages (in the latter case until the contract is
annulled), are irrelevant to the liquidation of the co-ownership that exists between
common-law spouses. The first paragraph of Article 50 of the Family Code,
applying paragraphs (2), (3), (4) and (5) of Article 43, relates only, by its explicit
terms, to voidable marriages and, exceptionally, to void marriages under Article 40
of the Code, i.e., the declaration of nullity of a subsequent marriage contracted by
a spouse of a prior void marriage before the latter is judicially declared void. The
latter is a special rule that somehow recognizes the philosophy and an old
doctrine that void marriages are inexistent from the very beginning and no judicial
decree is necessary to establish their nullity. In now requiring for purposes of
remarriage, the declaration of nullity by final judgment of the previously
contracted void marriage, the present law aims to do away with any continuing
uncertainty on the status of the second marriage. It is not then illogical for the
provisions of Article 43, in relation to Articles 41 and 42, of the Family Code, on
the effects of the termination of a subsequent marriage contracted during the
subsistence of a previous marriage to be made applicable pro hac vice. In all
other cases, it is not to be assumed that the law has also meant to have
coincident property relations, on the one hand, between spouses in valid and
voidable marriages (before annulment) and, on the other, between common-law
spouses or spouses of void marriages, leaving to ordain, in the latter case, the
ordinary rules on co-ownership subject to the provision of Article 147 and Article
148 of the Family Code. It must be stressed, nevertheless, even as it may merely
state the obvious, that the provisions of the Family Code on the "family home,"
i.e., the provisions found in Title V, Chapter 2, of the Family Code, remain in force
and effect regardless of the property regime of the spouses. 2 5

Since the properties ordered to be distributed by the court a quo were found, both by the
trial court and the Court of Appeals, to have been acquired during the union of the parties,
the same would be covered by the co-ownership. No fruits of a separate property of one of
the parties appear to have been included or involved in said distribution. The liquidation,
partition and distribution of the properties owned in common by the parties herein as
ordered by the court a quo should, therefore, be sustained, but on the basis of co-
ownership and not of the regime of conjugal partnership of gains.
As to the issue on custody of the parties over their only child, Javy Singh Buenaventura, it is
now moot since he is about to turn twenty-five years of age on May 27, 2005 2 6 and has,
therefore, attained the age of majority.
With regard to the issues on support raised in the Petition for Certiorari, these would also
now be moot, owing to the fact that the son, Javy Singh Buenaventura, as previously
stated, has attained the age of majority.
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WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals dated October 8, 1996 and its
Resolution dated December 10, 1996 which are contested in the Petition for Review (G.R.
No. 127449), are hereby MODIFIED, in that the award of moral and exemplary damages,
attorney's fees, expenses of litigation and costs are deleted. The order giving respondent
one-half of the retirement benefits of petitioner from Far East Bank and Trust Co. and one-
half of petitioner's shares of stock in Manila Memorial Park and in the Provident Group of
Companies is sustained but on the basis of the liquidation, partition and distribution of the
co-ownership and not of the regime of conjugal partnership of gains. The rest of said
Decision and Resolution are AFFIRMED.
The Petition for Review on Certiorari (G.R. No. 127358) contesting the Court of Appeals'
Resolutions of September 2, 1996 and November 13, 1996 which increased the support
pendente lite in favor of the parties' son, Javy Singh Buenaventura, is now MOOT and
ACADEMIC and is, accordingly, DISMISSED.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago and Carpio, JJ., concur.
Footnotes

1. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), p. 54.


2. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), p. 76.
3. Rollo (G.R. No. 127358), pp. 7-8.
4. Id. at 136.
5. Id. at 138.
6. Id. at 144.
7. Id. at 153.
8. G.R. No. 127449.
9. G.R. No. 127358.

10. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), p. 100.


11. Id. at 32.
12. Rollo (G.R. No. 127358) p. 11.
13. Id. at 15.
14. Id. at 17.
15. Id. at 20.
16. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), pp. 81-82.
17. ART. 2219. Moral damages may be recovered in the following and analogous cases:
(1) A criminal offense resulting in physical injuries;
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(2) Quasi-delicts causing physical injuries;
(3) Seduction, abduction, rape, or other lascivious acts;
(4) Adultery or concubinage;
(5) Illegal or arbitrary detention or arrest;
(6) Illegal search;

(7) Libel, slander or any other form of defamation;


(8) Malicious prosecution;
(9) Acts mentioned in article 309;
(10) Acts and actions referred to in articles 21, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 32, 34, and 35.
xxx xxx xxx

18. Santos v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 112019, 4 January 1995, 240 SCRA 20, 34.
Emphasis supplied.

19. Article 2229. Exemplary or corrective damages are imposed by way of example or
correction for the public good, in addition to the moral, temperate, liquidated or
compensatory damages.

20. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), p. 67.


21. Id. at 82.
22. Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), pp. 69-71.
23. Id. at 82-83.
24. G.R. No. 122749, 31 July 1996, 260 SCRA 221.

25. Id. at 226-234. (Emphasis in the original.)


26. Javy Singh Buenaventura was born on May 27, 1980; Rollo (G.R. No. 127449), p. 56.

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